Senate OKs financial reform

Wall Street regulations rewrite could become law by July

May 20, 2010|By Janet Hook and Jim Puzzanghera, Tribune Newspapers

WASHINGTON — — The Senate on Thursday approved the most sweeping rewrite of financial rules since the Great Depression, a milestone in President Barack Obama's drive to expand government oversight and safeguard against another crisis like the Wall Street meltdown of 2008.

The 59-39 vote was mostly along party lines: Four Republicans joined all but two Democrats in supporting the legislation.

Obama applauded as the Senate neared the end of its three-week debate on a top administration priority.

"Our goal is not to punish the banks but to protect the larger economy and the American people from the kind of upheavals that we've seen in the past few years," Obama said. "And today's action was a major step forward in achieving that goal."

"When this bill becomes law, the joyride on Wall Street will come to a screeching halt," Reid said.

Most Republicans opposed the legislation because they believed it went too far in expanding government oversight of the economy and not far enough in ending the possibility of future government bailouts.

"In my opinion, it's an overreach," said Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee, one of a handful of Republicans who spent weeks working with Democrats to craft a bipartisan compromise, only to vote against it in the end. "We could have made it better. We didn't."

The legislation would establish a new bureau within the Federal Reserve to protect consumers in the financial marketplace; impose tough regulations on complex financial derivatives; grant shareholders a nonbinding vote on executive compensation; and give the government authority to seize and dismantle teetering firms whose failure would pose a danger to the economy.

The House in December passed its version of the bill, which in some respects is more industry-friendly than the Senate's, a reflection, in part, of the intensification of anti-Wall Street sentiment in the last six months. Those differences will have to be resolved in House-Senate negotiations that Democrats hope to wrap up within weeks.

House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., predicted that the final bill will be written, passed and sent to Obama to sign by July 4.

"There's a need for speed," Frank said in a CNBC interview.

Still, the final negotiations likely will inspire fierce lobbying by financial, business and consumer interests. The Senate, for example, skirted a vote on an amendment that had been included in the House bill to exempt car dealers from the new consumer protection agency.

Car dealers continue to press senators to back a nonbinding motion supporting their cause, which is expected to come to a vote Monday.

The legislation cleared the last major hurdle earlier in the day when the Senate voted 60-40 to cut off debate. Three Republicans — Scott Brown of Massachusetts and Maine's Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins — joined Democrats to vote to end the filibuster.

Sens. Russell Feingold of Wisconsin and Maria Cantwell of Washington were the only Democrats to oppose ending debate because they wanted more time to consider amendments that would toughen the bill's new regulation, including a push to restore a prohibition on commercial banks doing investment banking.

In the vote on final passage, one other Republican, Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, joined the majority. Two Democratic senators, Robert Byrd of West Virginia and Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, were absent. Although it took 60 votes to break the filibuster, only 51 were needed to pass the bill.

Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and other Republicans were especially critical of the bill's new consumer bureau, which they said was an unnecessary expansion of government power that will impose onerous new regulations on small businesses that had no role in the financial crisis.

"It uses this crisis as yet another opportunity to expand the cost and size and reach of government," McConnell said. "It punishes Main Street for the sins of Wall Street."

And Republicans were particularly upset that the bill does not address the futures of mortgage-financing giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were seized by regulators in 2008 and have received a total of $126 billion in bailouts so far.

To the surprise of many, the bill from the Senate, typically the more conservative chamber of Congress, includes several more-populist provisions than the House version.

The House, for example, included an exemption from the consumer bureau for car dealers that offer financing for their customers. A push by auto dealers to get a similar exemption in the Senate bill has been unsuccessful so far.

The Senate also included an amendment designed to rein in fees charged to small businesses that allow the use of debit card purchases; the House has no comparable provision.

Those differences reflect, in part, the increasingly populist political climate that has been fueled by developments in the months since the House passed its bill.

A high-profile example of the changing tides of sentiment was the government's recent civil lawsuit filed against Goldman Sachs alleging fraud in the sale of derivatives based on mortgage-backed securities.

However, the Senate bill does not go as far in other areas as the House bill, which would create a $150 billion fund to help liquidate large firms on the brink of bankruptcy. The Senate's $50 billion fund was dropped in response to GOP complaints that it would perpetuate rather than end the risky practices of firms deemed "too big to fail."